|
|
|
|
|
by psyc
2984 days ago
|
|
What strikes me as a paradox is the premise that answerers do not have time to 'do my homework' or 'Google that for me' but they do have time to understand my complex real-world constraints in enough detail to make this judgment for me, before answering a question that is a minuscule detail in my overall solution. |
|
- To get a sense of pride and accomplishment by helping people who have a problem. They want to dig into what the actual problem is, in order to help the person in the best way. The don't want to solve homework problems because they are not "real" problems.
- To get a sense of pride and accomplishes by answering technical questions as correctly as possible. This type of person might also solve homework problems posted on the site because they enjoy the challenge.
Both motivations exist, and they have different attitudes to the XY problem. You will se both attitudes in this thread.
But not many people will get a sense of pride and accomplishments by answering a question which could be found by a single google query. So why should they use their time on that?